Maintaining order in the classrooms has never been easy and it is evident that the school setting requires some easing of the restrictions to which searches by public authorities are ordinarily subject.
– Byron R. White
Rape is highly reprehensible, both in a moral sense and in its almost total contempt for the personal integrity and autonomy of the female victim and for the latter's privilege of choosing those with whom intimate relations are to be established.
– Byron R. White
Respondent would have us announce a fundamental right to engage in homosexual sodomy. This we are quite unwilling to do.
– Byron R. White
Short of homicide, rape is the ultimate violation of self.
– Byron R. White
The 1st Amendment protects the right to speak, not the right to spend.
– Byron R. White
The Court is most vulnerable and comes nearest to illegitimacy when it deals with judge-made constitutional law having little or no cognizable roots in the language or design of the Constitution.
– Byron R. White
The law is constantly based on notions of morality, and if all laws representing essentially moral choices are to be invalidated under the due process clause, the courts will be very busy indeed.
– Byron R. White
The risk of racial prejudice infecting a capital sentencing proceeding is especially serious in light of the complete finality of the death sentence.
– Byron R. White
To exclude all jurors who would be in the slightest way affected by the prospect of the death penalty would be to deprive the defendant of the impartial jury to which he or she is entitled under the law.
– Byron R. White
We're the only branch of government that explains itself in writing every time it makes a decision.
– Byron R. White
Where the suspect poses no immediate threat to the officer and no threat to others, the harm resulting from the failing to apprehend him does not justify the use of deadly force to do so.